Time Domain Response of First Order RL and RC Circuits
Time Domain Response of First Order RL and RC Circuits
+ i + i
vs – L vs – C
4
FIRST-ORDER CIRCUITS
• Any first-order circuit can be reduced to a Thévenin
(or Norton) equivalent connected to either a single
equivalent inductor or capacitor. R Th
+
IN RN L VTh – C
0, t0
u( t )
1, t0
0, t to
u(t to )
1, t to
0, t to
u(t to )
1, t to
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7.3 UNIT-STEP FUNCTION (2)
Represent an abrupt change for:
1. voltage source.
7
RESPONSE CLASSIFICATION
• The natural response of an RL or RC circuit is its
behavior (i.e., current and voltage) when stored energy
in the inductor or capacitor is released to the resistive
part of the network (containing no independent
sources).
• The step response of an RL or RC circuit is its
behavior when a voltage or current source step is
applied to the circuit, or immediately after a switch
state is changed.
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NATURAL RESPONSE OF AN RL
CIRCUIT
• Consider the following circuit, for which the switch is closed for t
< 0, and then opened at t = 0:
t=0 i +
Io Ro L R v
–
Notation:
0– is used to denote the time just prior to switching
0+ is used to denote the time immediately after switching
• The current flowing in the inductor at t = 0– is Io
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SOLVING FOR THE CURRENT (T
0)
i +
Io Ro L R v
–
Io Ro L R v
–
i ( t ) I o e ( R / L ) t and v ( t ) I o Re ( R / L ) t
L (sec)
• Define the time constant
R
– At t = t, the current has reduced to 1/e (~0.37) of its
initial value.
– At t = 5t, the current has reduced to less than 1% of its
initial value.
12
CAPACITORS AND STORED
CHARGE
• Current doesn’t really “flow through” a capacitor. No
electrons can go through the insulator.
• But, we say that current flows through a capacitor. What
we mean is that positive charge collects on one plate and
leaves the other.
• A capacitor stores charge. Theoretically, if we did a KCL
surface around one plate, KCL could fail. But we don’t
do that.
• When a capacitor stores charge, it has nonzero voltage.
In this case, we say the capacitor is “charged”. A
capacitor with zero voltage has no charge differential,
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and we say it is “discharged”.
CAPACITORS IN CIRCUITS
• If you have a circuit with capacitors, you can use
KVL and KCL, nodal analysis, etc.
• The voltage across the capacitor is related to the
current through it by a differential equation instead
of Ohm’s law.
dV
iC
dt
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CAPACITORS
+V
|(
C
i(t)
capacitance is defined by
dV dV i
iC So
dt dt C
15
CHARGING A CAPACITOR WITH A CONSTANT
CURRENT
+ V(t)
|(
C
i
dV(t) i
dt C
t t
dV(t) i
0 dt dt 0 C dt
voltage
t
i i t
V(t) dt
0
C C time
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DISCHARGING A CAPACITOR
THROUGH A RESISTOR
V(t) + i
i C R
17
VOLTAGE VS TIME FOR AN RC
DISCHARGE
1.2
Voltage 1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
0 1 2 3 4
Time
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NATURAL RESPONSE OF AN RC
CIRCUIT
• Consider the following circuit, for which the switch is closed
for t < 0, and then opened at t = 0:
Ro t=0
+ +
Vo R
C v
–
Notation:
0– is used to denote the time just prior to switching
0+ is used to denote the time immediately after switching
• The voltage on the capacitor at t = 0– is Vo
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TIME CONSTANT T
• In the example, we found that
t / RC V o t / RC
v (t ) V o e and i (t ) e
R
(sec)
RC
• Define the time constant
– At t = t, the voltage has reduced to 1/e (~0.37) of its
initial value.
– At t = 5t, the voltage has reduced to less than 1% of its
initial value.
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NATURAL RESPONSE SUMMARY
RL Circuit RC Circuit
i +
L R C v R
–